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Mar 7, 2011
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ones who helped us up and actually gave us a break in our lives and encouraged us and gave the encouragement and the direction we needed when absolutely no one else would. it would be worth the trouble coming and i know better than to think that any good thing in my life was preordained. i know that. and i've come this far only because long ago a few people in my life thought it was actually worth the trouble. and thank goodness for that. he said the man, quote, didn't base his rating on games won or lost, but on the record of the player in later life. what kind of man he had become. i had a couple of coaches like that his influence as i can still feel today. i still have a relationship mentors in my life today. and i found the sick be the cadiz and work ethic and and forced it on a daily basis. it toughened up my game and they gave me confidence to play with the best and to never, ever let the other team inside my head those are the strengths that will serve you well in any line of work. that will come in handy if you are a republican running for the political office in massachusetts. [laug
ones who helped us up and actually gave us a break in our lives and encouraged us and gave the encouragement and the direction we needed when absolutely no one else would. it would be worth the trouble coming and i know better than to think that any good thing in my life was preordained. i know that. and i've come this far only because long ago a few people in my life thought it was actually worth the trouble. and thank goodness for that. he said the man, quote, didn't base his rating on games...
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Mar 19, 2011
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it is up to us. we have responsibilities. the third thing i would like to talk about before we get into the political side of politics is what is it going on around the world. we certainly watched with amazement what was going on in egypt the activities and the young people and the capacity to use twitter and facebook and gather crowds and stand up and protest the reasons that they were not very happy with and with a reason not being happy with, and we stand in a chair that and feared what was going to begin to happen in libya. we even gave a strong encouragement as a government in libya. gave the people that are beginning to live to fight. egypt was more peaceful. libya was cheating at each other. civil war. we give encouragement to the protesters. then we did nothing. we have done nothing. how unconscionable to give people the impression that we would provide some support and then stand back and let what is happening happened there. let me get back to the larger point. watching what is happening in egypt. we see issues like
it is up to us. we have responsibilities. the third thing i would like to talk about before we get into the political side of politics is what is it going on around the world. we certainly watched with amazement what was going on in egypt the activities and the young people and the capacity to use twitter and facebook and gather crowds and stand up and protest the reasons that they were not very happy with and with a reason not being happy with, and we stand in a chair that and feared what was...
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Mar 6, 2011
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and i don't use any additional security. i will say i am aware, and when i feel that the threat level rises, i do what i have to do to protect myself and my family, and my deepest wish is that people debate, they disagree, solve problems, and my philosophy, i will debate and then go out and have a beer with you. that's how die my bar gapping and associations. >> what has surprised you most about washington, dc. >> that's easy. >> you laugh. what is surprising the most is i travel -- i'm the luckiest guide in the world. no doubt. and i am blessed to be a united states senator. aside from the birth of my kids and my marriage, nothing i'm more proud of. is a travel around the world, around this country, you know what they talk about overseas? from the prime ministers and the presidents and business leaders, down to the poorest farmer pushing a cart, talk about jobs, and since i've been in the united states senate until we got back, we spent 12-15 days talking about nothing do with jobs. we're in the middle of a two-year recessi
and i don't use any additional security. i will say i am aware, and when i feel that the threat level rises, i do what i have to do to protect myself and my family, and my deepest wish is that people debate, they disagree, solve problems, and my philosophy, i will debate and then go out and have a beer with you. that's how die my bar gapping and associations. >> what has surprised you most about washington, dc. >> that's easy. >> you laugh. what is surprising the most is i...
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Mar 14, 2011
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politicians use religion to win votes. if you are at all curious about how influential religion has become in today's political arena, you need to read this book. another review called the book absolutely brilliant, fascinating, timely, and of great importance. it's so absolutely buy that book, too. still as you can see, we have a lot of expertise to bring to today's procession teach -- session. professors want to leave plenty of time for discussion. they will be beginning, and you can get your questions ready. at think we will start with dr. kate kenski, who will focus in on the 2008 election and factors that help us understand the outcomes of the elections and then dr. kevin coe will bring his focus in on the influence of religion in politics today. >> thank you much. i'm very much appreciate being here, and thank you for having us. from among the thousands of words that were spoken in the 2008 election might co-authors and i think that we pretty much mail down which words were most consequential during the campaign at v
politicians use religion to win votes. if you are at all curious about how influential religion has become in today's political arena, you need to read this book. another review called the book absolutely brilliant, fascinating, timely, and of great importance. it's so absolutely buy that book, too. still as you can see, we have a lot of expertise to bring to today's procession teach -- session. professors want to leave plenty of time for discussion. they will be beginning, and you can get your...
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Mar 8, 2011
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it is not about us. ask any grandparent. [applause] and even though the liberals starting in the white doves are trying to change this nation, -- starting in the white house are trying to change this nation, the liberals in washington, d.c., as the liberals all over this great nation, the united states of america is not going to become the united states of europe, not on our watch. thank you. [cheers and applause] . >> up next speaker is the former speaker, newt gingrich. [cheers and applause] he immersed himself in the study of history, in getting a master's in note -- history, getting a master's degree. he taught college for eight years. he was first elected to congress in 1978, where he served the six district -- sixth district. "the washington times" has called him "the indispensable leader." he got a man of the year in 1995. "meters make a possible. exceptionable leaders made them inevitable we do leaders make things possible -- leaders make things possible. exceptional leaders make them inevitable." under his leadershi
it is not about us. ask any grandparent. [applause] and even though the liberals starting in the white doves are trying to change this nation, -- starting in the white house are trying to change this nation, the liberals in washington, d.c., as the liberals all over this great nation, the united states of america is not going to become the united states of europe, not on our watch. thank you. [cheers and applause] . >> up next speaker is the former speaker, newt gingrich. [cheers and...
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Mar 25, 2011
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as it has been defined i'm going to use the language used by the plaintiff in the case is whether or not wal-mart fostered a, quote, corporate culture that allows, quote, gender stereotyping. and a corporate practice of giving store managers excess of subjectivity in multiple types of personnel decisions. when you ask a question like that it's pretty easy to see that it's common to everyone here but the answer isn't going to make a lot of difference to these women. in order to prove they themselves were discriminated against the are still going to have to bring forward most of their claims and that means you've held a huge trial for very little progress at all. that's not to say that you couldn't certified the class against wal-mart. very briefly, wal-mart has 41 different retail divisions all of which are staffed by your own vice president who makes the policy. you could become a class-action in to 41 of these. right now i think the damages have been put at roughly a billion dollars for the class, for the forced of a billion and still enough to make a lot of lawyers sulfate systole
as it has been defined i'm going to use the language used by the plaintiff in the case is whether or not wal-mart fostered a, quote, corporate culture that allows, quote, gender stereotyping. and a corporate practice of giving store managers excess of subjectivity in multiple types of personnel decisions. when you ask a question like that it's pretty easy to see that it's common to everyone here but the answer isn't going to make a lot of difference to these women. in order to prove they...
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Mar 13, 2011
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we need to go back to them and watch us cutting spending. obama wants to spend and we want to spend less. it may be small numbers that independents don't spend all day watching c-span. they don't focus on politics all day. they run their lives. they look up from time to time and they don't necessarily say one party of the -- or the other as their permanent allies or enemies. in 2006, 30% of the country looked up and did not like the occupation of iraq and afghanistan and did not understand what was going on. it seemed to be expensive in lives and money. four years later, the same independence looked up and said i never signed on to the tsunami massing -- massive spending increases. then they voted 60/44 the republicans. one needs to be cognizant of what the independents are focused on and what they care about and they are focused on voting against spending. if the republicans hold them, they win in 2012 and 2014 and we can begin to turn the ship around. you can have a different president at a different senate. that is the focus. >> let's fas
we need to go back to them and watch us cutting spending. obama wants to spend and we want to spend less. it may be small numbers that independents don't spend all day watching c-span. they don't focus on politics all day. they run their lives. they look up from time to time and they don't necessarily say one party of the -- or the other as their permanent allies or enemies. in 2006, 30% of the country looked up and did not like the occupation of iraq and afghanistan and did not understand what...
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Mar 6, 2011
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using drugs. they would also sometimes outrageous and then set up gordon which two people. this is based on stories from the platoon. the army investigated that after the colorado springs officially have never found any in about it, but i think some of it has happened. anyway, at some point he was so unstable in iraq that they put him on duty guarding the fog, the operating base and there he was caught with valium, which is available across the counter in iraq and he was court-martialed. they essentially decided he was to that of a soldier and too dangerous to keep in iraq, so they sent it back to colorado springs and they did this repeatedly with guys from this brigade. but the guy from colorado springs sky makes a very worried that of someone as to what able to stay in baghdad, you send them to us. and that's actually a good move if you have a robust behavioral health system in a good or detachment at the brigade that can keep track of these guys. neither of those would be placed in colorado spr
using drugs. they would also sometimes outrageous and then set up gordon which two people. this is based on stories from the platoon. the army investigated that after the colorado springs officially have never found any in about it, but i think some of it has happened. anyway, at some point he was so unstable in iraq that they put him on duty guarding the fog, the operating base and there he was caught with valium, which is available across the counter in iraq and he was court-martialed. they...
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Mar 19, 2011
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he says, help us out. they brought down his notes and his audiotapes and his unfinished manuscripts and said, we need your help. this is what christopher anderson writes. he spent six pages on this and a book that is obviously not done to support me. he has no interest in appealing to my audience. i read 80 reviews of christopher andersen's book. it was even on chris matthews. of those, do you know how many of them mentioned the single most newsworthy revelation and that. >> reporter: zero. it was at that moment that i knew, i know. my friends are saying, get your pulitzer prize speech ready. i said, you don't know this world as well as i do. and going to happen. zero out of 80. i went public. here is how the internet works. the people in the dead tree media don't understand or appreciate it. because the internet the press. my wife wonders why don't watch tv, an open sewer of untreated and unfiltered information. the internet existed in 1933 and 1933 and died like walter duranty would not have been able to
he says, help us out. they brought down his notes and his audiotapes and his unfinished manuscripts and said, we need your help. this is what christopher anderson writes. he spent six pages on this and a book that is obviously not done to support me. he has no interest in appealing to my audience. i read 80 reviews of christopher andersen's book. it was even on chris matthews. of those, do you know how many of them mentioned the single most newsworthy revelation and that. >> reporter:...
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Mar 8, 2011
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we need to clean what god gave us. i run to challenge the corrupt system. i run to dream of all the things that could be and make america that place for you. i am preparing to run for president. you come, too, iowa. you are our heart. thank you. [applause] >> you go, buddy! >> tim pawlenty often says that people's politics are rooted where they come from. that is south st. paul minnesota, a blue-collar neighborhood that was the home to the largest stockyards in america when he was growing up. one of five children, his father was a truck driver, and his mom passed away when he was young. he worked hard and became the first in his family to graduate from college. while he went on to law school , his siblings went on to become homemakers and grocers, and they became the center of his life. although they were democrats, at least until when he became governor of minnesota in 2002. i sure you his background because his leadership is rooted in the values he learned growing up. the values of hard work and family, and a promise of upward mobility. those values that
we need to clean what god gave us. i run to challenge the corrupt system. i run to dream of all the things that could be and make america that place for you. i am preparing to run for president. you come, too, iowa. you are our heart. thank you. [applause] >> you go, buddy! >> tim pawlenty often says that people's politics are rooted where they come from. that is south st. paul minnesota, a blue-collar neighborhood that was the home to the largest stockyards in america when he was...
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Mar 19, 2011
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>> the was four of us. three -- i have an older brother, a young brother right in a row, and then we have a caboose, my sister, marty who came along 12 years after. >> when did you get interested in journalism? >> i got interested in journalism right in college. i started writing for the school paper, and it never left my blood. in fact, at o point, at berkeley i volunteered for a congressman for a while, and realized this was not for me. >> which one? >> dellums. >> what impact did that have on you? what was that like? >> it just wasn't what i was interested in. i think i am more of an observer than an advocate. i do better at telling stories and observing, and that's what i would like to do. >> what did you see at berkeley? anyone listening says, berkeley, these are conservatives. >> that's right. i think there was definitely -- funny when i look back on this, this is my generation, these folks are my age, and when i look back there was definitely a liberal orthodoxy on campus. "the daily cal" which i wor
>> the was four of us. three -- i have an older brother, a young brother right in a row, and then we have a caboose, my sister, marty who came along 12 years after. >> when did you get interested in journalism? >> i got interested in journalism right in college. i started writing for the school paper, and it never left my blood. in fact, at o point, at berkeley i volunteered for a congressman for a while, and realized this was not for me. >> which one? >> dellums....
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and banking which used to be so instead we were living in a bubble economy banking which used to be this nice board. i mean business and it should be frankly predictable safe profitable marginally even boring and thinking for the long term banking generated thirty five percent of the of our corporate profits year before last i don't know the numbers for life cheerio and now the banks are saying that this year is going to be their best year in twenty years this is incredible so what we have now is an economy that's driven by bubbles we have the tech bubble age that just think in the last just the last ten or twelve years we have the tech bubble we have the stock market and all of them by the way followed by a crash the oil bubble the real estate bubble the food bubble the derivatives bubble and now according to alex our guest we've got a secondary housing bubble that's about to crash we need to bring banking back to the notion there's a couple of steps that we need to do really quickly that basically undo a lot of the damage that was done by the reagan administration and several administr
and banking which used to be so instead we were living in a bubble economy banking which used to be this nice board. i mean business and it should be frankly predictable safe profitable marginally even boring and thinking for the long term banking generated thirty five percent of the of our corporate profits year before last i don't know the numbers for life cheerio and now the banks are saying that this year is going to be their best year in twenty years this is incredible so what we have now...
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Mar 12, 2011
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he showed us all how to do it. he was our mentor and our teacher and he did it in the most gentlemanly imaginable. he wrote a column for four years at "the post." he thalls thought of the column as what he did in his off hours, which he literally did, as you know. he was a reporter. he was a reporter's reporter. and he believed first and foremost that the way you did political journalism was to go out and report and particularly talk to voters. gwen: people ask me all the time, who's the most famous, most important person you ever interviewed, thanks i'm sure to the inspiration of david, it's always someone he never heard of, some guy in the supermarket aisle who told me what he really thought about george bush or john kerry in 2004. or some woman on the national mall on the day that barry bonds -- barack obama was inaugurated and stopped me crying, telling me the story of her son. i realized i got more from talking to people like that in a lot of ways than talking to presidents. >> david spent an immense amount of
he showed us all how to do it. he was our mentor and our teacher and he did it in the most gentlemanly imaginable. he wrote a column for four years at "the post." he thalls thought of the column as what he did in his off hours, which he literally did, as you know. he was a reporter. he was a reporter's reporter. and he believed first and foremost that the way you did political journalism was to go out and report and particularly talk to voters. gwen: people ask me all the time, who's...
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Mar 24, 2011
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it has taken us 20 years working with us. so don't forget about that. >> them are still not satisfied. >> which you have to find a way to work this out. >> thank you also much. i was a fascinating panel. i hope you have things you cannot take back to your organizations. barbara, sylvia, caroline, thank you for joining me up your. [applause] [inaudible conversations]
it has taken us 20 years working with us. so don't forget about that. >> them are still not satisfied. >> which you have to find a way to work this out. >> thank you also much. i was a fascinating panel. i hope you have things you cannot take back to your organizations. barbara, sylvia, caroline, thank you for joining me up your. [applause] [inaudible conversations]
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Mar 19, 2011
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ayers, narrative gentry can be useful to all of this. obama. truth is the best corrective. ayers, the mind works in contradiction, and honesty requires the writer to reveal disputes with the self. notice with the self. obama, but i suspect we can't pretend the contradictions of the situation will exist can do is choose. ayers, the reader must see the struggle not by the tourist what wyatt program. obama, and all and all of an intellectual journey i imagine for myself complete with last point and strict itinerary. ayers, narrative raptors strive for signature but must be aware of the struggle for the honesty. obama, i was engaged in a imperial struggle. someone -- by the way, this is the only postmodern bouck obama route. it shows up and nothing else he ever wrote except dreams from my father. there's not a word in any of the articles otherwise. also at that point in the postmodern fling as well the grooves in which they had fallen and even the stitch together nature of their lives these are distinctive freezes, and the other thing i'm reading in the fugitive days is that af
ayers, narrative gentry can be useful to all of this. obama. truth is the best corrective. ayers, the mind works in contradiction, and honesty requires the writer to reveal disputes with the self. notice with the self. obama, but i suspect we can't pretend the contradictions of the situation will exist can do is choose. ayers, the reader must see the struggle not by the tourist what wyatt program. obama, and all and all of an intellectual journey i imagine for myself complete with last point...
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Mar 15, 2011
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we've used it, but it's worth using again, and we have hundreds. qualcomm, a country very well-known, it developed the software primarily that allows wireless communication 20 years ago. nobody ever heard of qualcomm and very few people had cell phones that weighed, you know, less than three pounds each, as i remember. but 25 to 30 people came together with dr. jacobs. they sat in his den. he testified before our committee just last week on this. and he said, through the sbir program, their initial idea got a couple a hundred thousand dollars and then phase 2, they got $1.5 million, which is what this program does, incentivizing our giving grants or contracts to very -- to emerging technologies, well before a bank would take a look, well before venture capital funds would even look their direction. you have to develop the technology to a point and then have it launched. this is where there's what he described the valley of death. you know, great ideas, but there's just not a lot of patient capital out there, and particularly in this recessionary pe
we've used it, but it's worth using again, and we have hundreds. qualcomm, a country very well-known, it developed the software primarily that allows wireless communication 20 years ago. nobody ever heard of qualcomm and very few people had cell phones that weighed, you know, less than three pounds each, as i remember. but 25 to 30 people came together with dr. jacobs. they sat in his den. he testified before our committee just last week on this. and he said, through the sbir program, their...
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Mar 24, 2011
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all of us. so i think that is the only type in the country. no other big mayors from big cities have meetings. we have meetings every four months and i am just a member, one of the founding members but a member today and i participate with other mayors rum the counties, all the counties around here, which is really important for us. a mayor from aurora and rockford in peoria come down and some from milwaukee and some of the indiana mayors, were to work with us on many issues so we are very proud of that. at the same time i believe the success of chicago has been a public-private partnership. you can go to hospitals, museums the business committee has been very very helpful in all aspects of the city and it really helps us tremendously to have the business community supporting us. that doesn't mean corporate headquarters or operations, local and federal and local taxes and other things, but that has been a key the key and no other city has it. see is more democrat been the business community so h
all of us. so i think that is the only type in the country. no other big mayors from big cities have meetings. we have meetings every four months and i am just a member, one of the founding members but a member today and i participate with other mayors rum the counties, all the counties around here, which is really important for us. a mayor from aurora and rockford in peoria come down and some from milwaukee and some of the indiana mayors, were to work with us on many issues so we are very...
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broadcasting live from our studios and some from also this is our team would love to have you with us now for the look at the week's top stories right here british special forces soldiers are released today by libyan opposition as fears grow of a foreign military intervention in the country experts claim any military action in libya would be driven because of skyrocketing fuel prices and the u.s. congress winning hearts and minds a broad hillary clinton asks for more funding to spread the restlessness overseas as more people turn to alternative sources for the u.s. secretary of state says america's losing in information war to foreign outlets including our team. and in a bid to regain public trust major reforms seem the russian police force renamed and officers retraining selection will be more rigorous and pay increase in the hope of turning out more professional officers. now some heated debate for you val and his guests discuss if the union protests in the u.s. will affect democracy crosstalk is coming up next. for the full story we've got. the biggest issues get the human voice th
broadcasting live from our studios and some from also this is our team would love to have you with us now for the look at the week's top stories right here british special forces soldiers are released today by libyan opposition as fears grow of a foreign military intervention in the country experts claim any military action in libya would be driven because of skyrocketing fuel prices and the u.s. congress winning hearts and minds a broad hillary clinton asks for more funding to spread the...
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Mar 13, 2011
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so we certainly invite people to e-mail us, bring their books to our attention, send us their publicity packets so we know in plenty of time that it's coming, and we can decide whether it's one we want to take a shot at reviewing. >> mr. stewart, you said that a lot of your reviewers and people involved in the washington independent review of books have backgrounds in writing and publishing. what's your background, and give us a snapshot of some of the people who will be participating. >> well, my background is i was a lawyer for many years, but i'm now an author, have done a couple of books on american history, one on writing the constitution, the summer of 1787, one on the impeachment trial of andrew johnson, "impeached," and i have a new one coming out this fall called "american emperor." the other folks involved come from journalism, there are book writers as well. we've been so lucky in recruiting reviewers. we've got for a book on the eichmann trial in israel we were able to get judge patricia walt who was on the war crimes tribunal for yugoslavia. we've been able to get a leading
so we certainly invite people to e-mail us, bring their books to our attention, send us their publicity packets so we know in plenty of time that it's coming, and we can decide whether it's one we want to take a shot at reviewing. >> mr. stewart, you said that a lot of your reviewers and people involved in the washington independent review of books have backgrounds in writing and publishing. what's your background, and give us a snapshot of some of the people who will be participating....
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Mar 10, 2011
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>> senator, the interesting thing when we testified as the four of us use the word fragile to decide the market. and i'm struck by the parties a handle with care. the problem is the media treats the realistic as a single market across the country. it is all local. one of the things we need to get back to is what is going on in the local market and understand that the financing sources are in fact national. the challenge we are faced with right now is a lot of people who should be able to obtain financing are able to. when fannie and freddie have credit scores that average 60 up from 720 we've got 15% of the market that could help to absorb that shadow inventory. there's a second piece of the shuttle inventory we would like to get it out there and resulted so we can go back to a normal, stable dynamic markets. but there is an opportunity for short sales in the market which just hasn't been realized in an effective way. that is clearly better for the investor and actually in most instances better for the families. the investor and supposing 37% of principal on average versus 50%. but t
>> senator, the interesting thing when we testified as the four of us use the word fragile to decide the market. and i'm struck by the parties a handle with care. the problem is the media treats the realistic as a single market across the country. it is all local. one of the things we need to get back to is what is going on in the local market and understand that the financing sources are in fact national. the challenge we are faced with right now is a lot of people who should be able to...
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Mar 31, 2011
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just confirm for us, dr. giordano, how much difference to make it jerry parr turned that part the hospital? >> it was the critical decision of the day, no question about it. because the president, as he walked -- ki insisted on walking into gw, he got just past the front door and collapsed for blood pressure. even as young healthy person that's pretty serious, you can only last a few minutes before you have irreversible changes, and the president 7-years-old, albeit a very healthy seven year old. so i think -- just think it, but at the white house, pull him out of the car, looked him over, bring him to the room inside, put him in the car and realize there's a problem, taken to gw, that is five, ten, 15 minutes. that would have made a huge difference. i don't think he would have survived it. >> cingular arrived -- the timeframe the shooting happened at 2:27, approximately. six shots got off in less than two seconds. how long the for the hospital was dealing with this? it was just a matter of a few more minutes
just confirm for us, dr. giordano, how much difference to make it jerry parr turned that part the hospital? >> it was the critical decision of the day, no question about it. because the president, as he walked -- ki insisted on walking into gw, he got just past the front door and collapsed for blood pressure. even as young healthy person that's pretty serious, you can only last a few minutes before you have irreversible changes, and the president 7-years-old, albeit a very healthy seven...
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Mar 31, 2011
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that surprised us, frankly. there is an attempt to try to organize this better and a recognition that this is a real problem. we will benefit from your recommendations greatly, and a look forward to them. >> they need operational responsibility. >> that is the problem. interestingly enough, and this now goes back a while, we had a hearing here maybe two years ago now. it's somewhat dated, but a hearing with some leaders of the muslim american community. we asked, is there any agency of the federal government that has gone out reach to your community which has done the most? to me the surprising answer we got was, yes, the fbi through its state offices had been reaching out quite a lot and had some communication the nypd sets the standard. it has committed -- not inexpensive, labor intensive. they have committed a lot, maybe because they were so struck, traumatized by 9/11 they have committed a lot of resources and excellent communication with the muslim american community. the lapd does a great job, but there ar
that surprised us, frankly. there is an attempt to try to organize this better and a recognition that this is a real problem. we will benefit from your recommendations greatly, and a look forward to them. >> they need operational responsibility. >> that is the problem. interestingly enough, and this now goes back a while, we had a hearing here maybe two years ago now. it's somewhat dated, but a hearing with some leaders of the muslim american community. we asked, is there any agency...
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a huge take out your you don't have to put on a seventy we're off a lot of the somebody just ripped us off for trillions of dollars that look longer i think that when you want to set it up as a minority and women inclusion the every special interest got something in the twenty three hundred page bill i think we've got i think i think the fact is i think if we cared a great deal of course and that the american people have an interest in seeing their being reform on wall street so yes if the american people in the general you know role for the economy as this special interest and i'm sorry but i'm going to leave my little port from their own commission they still going to have to close and somebody commission i mean it didn't wait for it to report on a program to something what do you go public and really want to do they want to cut spending or do they want to cut the taxes because a lot of these provisions in here that they're talking about cutting is actually going to raise the deficit if they cut the funding for health care that is going to increase the tappet say the health care bill
a huge take out your you don't have to put on a seventy we're off a lot of the somebody just ripped us off for trillions of dollars that look longer i think that when you want to set it up as a minority and women inclusion the every special interest got something in the twenty three hundred page bill i think we've got i think i think the fact is i think if we cared a great deal of course and that the american people have an interest in seeing their being reform on wall street so yes if the...
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but i'll be back with more news for us than thirty minutes from now i mean time the fight for the rights of american workers and crosstalk look at the protests in wisconsin which testing a cornerstone of the country's and marcy that's crossed from next. week we'll. bring you the latest in science and technology from the realms. of the future coverage. you can. start. to think you want to. blow and welcome the rosco gun control of our drawing battle lines over collective bargaining puts america's democracy credentials in the line of fire but is this move the red tape roll back one attack on the founding fathers. can. start. to discuss the state of democracy in the us i'm joined by steve lesser in new york he's a columnist for democrats for progress dot com also in new york we have niles stanage a journalist and author of redemption song in irish reporter inside the obama campaign and in washington we cross to ford o'connell he's chairman of civic form pac and another member of our cross talk team illinois hunger all right gentlemen all three of you have been on cross talk before so you kn
but i'll be back with more news for us than thirty minutes from now i mean time the fight for the rights of american workers and crosstalk look at the protests in wisconsin which testing a cornerstone of the country's and marcy that's crossed from next. week we'll. bring you the latest in science and technology from the realms. of the future coverage. you can. start. to think you want to. blow and welcome the rosco gun control of our drawing battle lines over collective bargaining puts...
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discuss the state of democracy in the us i'm joined by steve lesser in new york he's a columnist for democrats for progress dot com also in new york we have niles standage a journalist and author of redemption song an irish reporter inside the obama campaign and in washington we cross to florida o'connell he's chairman of civic form pac and another member of our cross talk team yelena hunger all right gentlemen all three of you have been on cross talk before so you know how it works for and i want to go to you and inside a little bit about collective bargaining in the united states democracy are the founding fathers a little worried right now as they see what's coming out of ohio and out of wisconsin the current resting i had states isn't about the merits of democracy democracy is live alive and well it's really about sort of spending and fiscal responsibility as a relates to government this may be the issue of the decade in the united states to be perfectly honest with you democrats love to blame folks like george w. bush i don't reality the situation dates back to over a generation
discuss the state of democracy in the us i'm joined by steve lesser in new york he's a columnist for democrats for progress dot com also in new york we have niles standage a journalist and author of redemption song an irish reporter inside the obama campaign and in washington we cross to florida o'connell he's chairman of civic form pac and another member of our cross talk team yelena hunger all right gentlemen all three of you have been on cross talk before so you know how it works for and i...
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ass cut off his foreign cash goes under along key experts warn of a legacy of using frozen assets as a long term political tool. and young people in italy look to inject fresh blood into the country's leadership but some fear it could mean leading to the nationalistic far right. up next to fight for the rights of american workers as peter lavelle's cross-talk guests look at the protests in wisconsin which are testing a cornerstone of the country's democracy. will . bring you the latest in science and technology from the realms of what. we've done to the future. can't. stand. alone and welcome the prosecution carol about drawing battle lines over collective bargaining puts america's democracy credentials in the line of fire but is this move the red tape rolled back one attack on the founding fathers. can. still. discuss the state of democracy in the us i'm joined by steve lesser in new york he's a columnist for democrats for progress dot com also in new york we have niles standage a journalist and author of redemption song an irish reporter inside the obama campaign and in washington
ass cut off his foreign cash goes under along key experts warn of a legacy of using frozen assets as a long term political tool. and young people in italy look to inject fresh blood into the country's leadership but some fear it could mean leading to the nationalistic far right. up next to fight for the rights of american workers as peter lavelle's cross-talk guests look at the protests in wisconsin which are testing a cornerstone of the country's democracy. will . bring you the latest in...
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us opt out. we can't live under these mandates. but the president's solution is to cram more people on to medicaid, a program that doesn't work, where many doctors won't see these patients, where the reimbursements are so low, hospitals say we can't afford to see these patients because of the impact it will have. you know, even the -- the actuaries, the people that look at this, the fair and appropriate way to look at the numbers say 15% of the hospitals in this country ten years from now may not be able to b be open because of the way that this health care law is going. that's not going to provide more access. it's providing less access. and why have seniors rejected this so overwhelmingly? seniors have looked at this and they see $500 billion in medicare cuts. and things like medicare advantage. and there's an advantage to income that program. that's why one out of four seniors have set up that progr program. and have chosen that program. it's because they want choice. and this health care law
us opt out. we can't live under these mandates. but the president's solution is to cram more people on to medicaid, a program that doesn't work, where many doctors won't see these patients, where the reimbursements are so low, hospitals say we can't afford to see these patients because of the impact it will have. you know, even the -- the actuaries, the people that look at this, the fair and appropriate way to look at the numbers say 15% of the hospitals in this country ten years from now may...
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Mar 19, 2011
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working for us. regulating is terribly important industry, and the result of that recruiting tour was a narrow jobs announcement -- narrow in terms of time -- was overwhelming, and that was rewarding, and we're bringing people on. we're separately -- we're doing -- >> i would be curious, how many people were you able to hire? because the process of actually hiring somebody in today's federal government seems impossible. would you mind my asking -- >> we brought on 70 new people since june 1 last year. many of those are back phil. >> but they're new people. in addition the engineering people we're bringing on, we obviously have a great need for environmental scientists and people with environmental background. so we're going to be doing the same kind of thing we kind of thing we mid october and november in two weeks we're going out to various environmental studies programs in universities across at the country, trying to recruit them and make them aware of the important public service opportunities av
working for us. regulating is terribly important industry, and the result of that recruiting tour was a narrow jobs announcement -- narrow in terms of time -- was overwhelming, and that was rewarding, and we're bringing people on. we're separately -- we're doing -- >> i would be curious, how many people were you able to hire? because the process of actually hiring somebody in today's federal government seems impossible. would you mind my asking -- >> we brought on 70 new people...
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number is too high but it's down to ten percent if you want to talk about the deficit talk about the us talk about tax breaks the co-ordinates. the wall street bailout. how about social security as month senator sanders also released his own proposal to cut the deficit but doesn't throw seniors in the working class under the bus by ripping apart america's social safety net senator sanders joins me now from capitol hill to talk about this issue and the best ways forward for america senator sanders welcome good to be with you great to have you here i had in my radio show today a koch brothers funded think tank guy who said with a totally straight face and said he had all the numbers to back it up by twenty forty all of our tax dollars are going to pay for two things the national debt or interest on the national debt and social security and everything else will be wiped out through no not true at all in terms of social security. right now is an enormous amount of misinformation being thrown to the american people the reality is that social security has a two point six trillion dollars surp
number is too high but it's down to ten percent if you want to talk about the deficit talk about the us talk about tax breaks the co-ordinates. the wall street bailout. how about social security as month senator sanders also released his own proposal to cut the deficit but doesn't throw seniors in the working class under the bus by ripping apart america's social safety net senator sanders joins me now from capitol hill to talk about this issue and the best ways forward for america senator...
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three thirty pm in moscow good to have you with us here on our t.v. easier headlines fighting for control of key cities intensifies in libya but the media is being blamed for making it look much worse than it is stoking the conflict just to get striking headlines. as gadhafi is foreign cash goes under lock and key experts warn of the legacy of using frozen assets as a long term political tool. and young people in italy look to inject fresh blood to the country's leadership but some fear it could mean leading to the nationalistic fault right. next to fight for the rights of american workers but as peter lavelle's cross-talk gas look at the protests in wisconsin which are testing the cornerstone of the country's democracy stay with us crosstalk coming up next. we'll. bring you the latest in science and technology from the realms. of the future coverage. can you still. want to. follow and welcome the crossfire gang people who go drawing battle lines over collective bargaining puts america's democracy credentials in the line of fire but is this move the r
three thirty pm in moscow good to have you with us here on our t.v. easier headlines fighting for control of key cities intensifies in libya but the media is being blamed for making it look much worse than it is stoking the conflict just to get striking headlines. as gadhafi is foreign cash goes under lock and key experts warn of the legacy of using frozen assets as a long term political tool. and young people in italy look to inject fresh blood to the country's leadership but some fear it...
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in libya is already happening he's a multi-billion dollar foreign assets are being frozen and often use a political tool of western powers looking to protect interests in the region. and massive influx of illegal immigrants from violence prone arab countries fueling anti muslim sentiment in european states taking them in germany's new interior minister has become the latest politician to enter the immigration debate he says islam does not belong in europe. next to fight for the rights of u.s. workers as peter all about his cross talk guess look here with the protests in wisconsin that are testing the cornerstone of the country's democracy cross talk coming your way next. we'll. bring you the latest in science and technology from the realms of. the future coverage. can't. stand. alone and welcome the prosecution carol about drawing battle lines over collective bargaining puts america's democracy credentials in the line of fire but is this move the red tape rolled back when attacks on the founding fathers. can. start. to discuss the state of democracy in the us i'm joined by steve lesser
in libya is already happening he's a multi-billion dollar foreign assets are being frozen and often use a political tool of western powers looking to protect interests in the region. and massive influx of illegal immigrants from violence prone arab countries fueling anti muslim sentiment in european states taking them in germany's new interior minister has become the latest politician to enter the immigration debate he says islam does not belong in europe. next to fight for the rights of u.s....
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that is mainly the criteria that we use for thinking about whether we should use it. the ca chair is not the person that decides to to use that. that is one of our tool kit of things. and we are monitoring the situation. it is nice -- it is completely full. it is in salt mines or something or in different places. but it is not depleted. that is an option that we have. and it is usually tied to the issue of the supply disruption. thanks, everybody. [applause] [captioning performed by national captioning institute] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2011] >> the senate tomorrow will debate and vote on two proposals for this fiscal year. i house has passed republican plan that cuts more than $60 billion, and a democratic proposal to cut more than $6 billion. live coverage on c-span2 at noon eastern. in a few moments, the co- chairman of the president's commission on fiscal responsibility testify on capitol hill about their commission's final report. in about 2.5 hours, more about a bipartisan effort to deal with the deficit from democratic senator mark wa
that is mainly the criteria that we use for thinking about whether we should use it. the ca chair is not the person that decides to to use that. that is one of our tool kit of things. and we are monitoring the situation. it is nice -- it is completely full. it is in salt mines or something or in different places. but it is not depleted. that is an option that we have. and it is usually tied to the issue of the supply disruption. thanks, everybody. [applause] [captioning performed by national...
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i used to work there. i was in the green room and the president decided to double down and get this bill passed. who cared about the public opinions? he was going to have the house passed it. i said where you doing? you are going to destroy yourself in the election. the public is against what you are doing. what are you doing? he said, let me tell you. reid, pelosi, obama. we believe americans love entitlements and once we get you hooked on entitlement, they will never let it go. sounds like nothing more than trying to hook someone like a drug dealer. is that what entitlements do, mccue dependent? make you feel less and what less? [applause] if that is not a moral issue, if what we're doing to the next generation, this entitlement attitude, if that is not a moral issue, i do not know what is. we have an obligation. we have an obligation as americans to do what my grandfather and father did for me. to leave our country better than we found it. a lot of tough things going on right now. i feel blessed to be h
i used to work there. i was in the green room and the president decided to double down and get this bill passed. who cared about the public opinions? he was going to have the house passed it. i said where you doing? you are going to destroy yourself in the election. the public is against what you are doing. what are you doing? he said, let me tell you. reid, pelosi, obama. we believe americans love entitlements and once we get you hooked on entitlement, they will never let it go. sounds like...
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when it comes to the use of force by u.s. presidents none have been in response to a military attack or even threat of an attack on u.s. soil and none have ever been formally declared wars we had to protect thousands of innocent people in kosovo from a mounting military offensive we are determined to knock out saddam hussein's nuclear bomb potential we will also destroy his chemical weapons facilities self defense is not only our right it is our duty the definition of duty often changing the result eerily parallel thank you god bless you. god. thank you very much christine r t. russia says that the u.n. backed military intervention in libya is a result of colonel gadhafi as crimes against his own citizens but president to be treatment here therefore so criticized the coalition bombing saying the no fly zone was meant to strengthen peace and that civilians should not be put at risk. just that everything that's happening in libya is a result of the shameful behavior of its government and the crimes against their own people but
when it comes to the use of force by u.s. presidents none have been in response to a military attack or even threat of an attack on u.s. soil and none have ever been formally declared wars we had to protect thousands of innocent people in kosovo from a mounting military offensive we are determined to knock out saddam hussein's nuclear bomb potential we will also destroy his chemical weapons facilities self defense is not only our right it is our duty the definition of duty often changing the...
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us. >> from all of us, we appreciate your time. hope to >>> tonight on "world news," sounding the alarm. urgent new warnings about massive earthquake faults could be crisscrossing this country. are you at risk and don't know it? our reporter gets the shock of her life. >>> cozy connections. did the administration funnel billions of dollars for desperately needed jobs to big obama fund-raiser. the brian ross investigation breaks here tonight. >>> whale of a comeback. one year after horrifying the nation, dragging and drowning his helpless trainer, this 12,000-pound killer whale is back on the job. tonight, see the performance that had the sellout crowd cheering. >>> and what would you do? you and your buddies win a mind-boggling jackpot. one friend didn't kick in. it's the $319 million dilemma. >>> good evening. if you think you live where a catastrophic earthquake couldn't happen, if you think the country is prepared to deal with a devastating quake, a wakeup call tonight. with images of japan in all our minds, top scientists issue
us. >> from all of us, we appreciate your time. hope to >>> tonight on "world news," sounding the alarm. urgent new warnings about massive earthquake faults could be crisscrossing this country. are you at risk and don't know it? our reporter gets the shock of her life. >>> cozy connections. did the administration funnel billions of dollars for desperately needed jobs to big obama fund-raiser. the brian ross investigation breaks here tonight. >>> whale...
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to be used for the show how it's not just the bench showing us a new world chose to move to take brand because of the purses they goes across europe voters are saying. thirty measures portugal's prime minister has quit of the poll but voted down a fresh round of cuts because she has. three months left to repay almost ten billion euro at a time when its sovereign credit rating has been caught analysts say the only option left is national default tolan does the country called pay back its loans or accept an e.u. bailout similar to greece and ireland it hasn't happened in the west since the second world war but the longer you postpone this necessary evil. the more costly it is it's going to be at the same time military intervention in libya is costing hundreds of millions of euros many a furious so what they see as an unnecessary and expensive campaign somebody asked the chancellor of the finance minister about the financing of this and i think the overwhelming sense that you got from among the public in britain with skepticism with millions unemployed across europe people losing patience
to be used for the show how it's not just the bench showing us a new world chose to move to take brand because of the purses they goes across europe voters are saying. thirty measures portugal's prime minister has quit of the poll but voted down a fresh round of cuts because she has. three months left to repay almost ten billion euro at a time when its sovereign credit rating has been caught analysts say the only option left is national default tolan does the country called pay back its loans...
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many of these are familiar to us. we hold these truths to be self-evident, all men are created equal and endowed with certain inalien able rights, life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. i would submit, mr. speaker, that the people are the ones who are giving us the power to govern and that the constitution as it was written back by our founding fathers was written in the efforts to protect each individual and to protect each individual freedom that we have and enjoy every day. i would also mention that as was mentioned before, that it is important for us as americans to not only take on that personal responsibility, but also to realize that our freedoms are given from our creator and they are also -- it's important for each one of us to not only to fight to protect those freedoms, but remember some of the words that our founding fathers used as well. only a people are capable of freedom. as na
many of these are familiar to us. we hold these truths to be self-evident, all men are created equal and endowed with certain inalien able rights, life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. i would submit, mr. speaker, that the people are the ones who are giving us the power to govern and that the constitution as it was written back by our founding fathers was written in...
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to be used for instance on security. to be used for health not drug the bank sure when you bring you the world's worst move to take ground because of the prison there goes across europe voters are saying no more spirity measures portugal's prime minister has quit off the parliament voted down a fresh round of cuts because he has three months left to repay almost ten billion euro at a time when its sovereign credit rating has been caught. the only option left is national default to tell lenders the country called pay back its loans or accept an e.u. bailout similar to greece and ireland it hasn't happened in the west since the second world war but the longer you respond this necessary evil. the more costly it is it's going to be at the same time military intervention in libya is costing hundreds of millions of euros many of fear is so what they see as an unnecessary and expensive campaign somebody. the chancellor of the exchequer the finance minister about the financing of this and i think the overwhelming sense that you
to be used for instance on security. to be used for health not drug the bank sure when you bring you the world's worst move to take ground because of the prison there goes across europe voters are saying no more spirity measures portugal's prime minister has quit off the parliament voted down a fresh round of cuts because he has three months left to repay almost ten billion euro at a time when its sovereign credit rating has been caught. the only option left is national default to tell lenders...
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and use all of us i am i going to try to get the state for us to do that that's i don't want to have that special right now we can have come back on you know what if you know what if you know what i do and i'm conception yes and there's a bunch of things in these in these frozen nitrogen tubes and you know after the after the woman gets pregnant they take the rest of them for the time so i'm being consistent i'm saying that we shouldn't have those frozen embryos on ice so you know right now at our cells no i'm. we should we can have i.v.'s but don't freeze any embryos unless you're going to use them you know take take the eggs that you plan to use and use them you can not dispose of them if you have the strain we have a strange thing called embryo adoption i'm i'm saying we got ourselves with that situation we're going to go back to that we weren't able to have this discussion before the technology is on the side of the pro-life or state rights when i go against heather and i've listened long enough i gave you a lot of rope here the bottom line is we're here today because governor ri
and use all of us i am i going to try to get the state for us to do that that's i don't want to have that special right now we can have come back on you know what if you know what if you know what i do and i'm conception yes and there's a bunch of things in these in these frozen nitrogen tubes and you know after the after the woman gets pregnant they take the rest of them for the time so i'm being consistent i'm saying that we shouldn't have those frozen embryos on ice so you know right now at...
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markets why not us canada. find out what's really happening to the global economy with max cons are for a no holds barred look at the global financial headlines tune into kinds a report on our.
markets why not us canada. find out what's really happening to the global economy with max cons are for a no holds barred look at the global financial headlines tune into kinds a report on our.